Friday 15 September 2017 08.06 EDT
First published on Thursday 14 September 2017 13.09 EDT

More than 80 people are now confirmed dead in an attack on a restaurant frequented by Shia Muslim pilgrims in southern Iraq that was claimed by Islamic State.

Iraqi officials said 84 people had been killed and 93 people injured in the attack in Nasiriyah, in Iraq’s southern Thi Qar province on Thursday evening. Seven Iranians were among the dead, said the provincial governor, Yahya al-Nassiri.

Nassiri added that the province’s director of intelligence had been removed. The interior ministry has called for him to be investigated.

The attack began as a shooting at a checkpoint and restaurant along the main road that connects the province to Baghdad, followed by two suicide bombers, one driving a car laden with explosives.

The spiritual leader of Iraq’s Shia majority called on Iraq’s central government and local leaders “to undertake responsibly and professionally the protection of citizens from terrorists”.

The group’s activity is usually concentrated in western and northern Iraq. Bomb attacks in the south, where the bulk of the country’s oil is produced and security forces hold a tighter grip, are relatively rare.

Security sources said forces were on alert in most of the southern provinces, including the oil city of Basra, in case of similar attacks.